Author Topic: How have pigeons lived for this long?  (Read 1236 times)

tony would probably dive into a grain silo out of curiosity

This made me burst out laughing

This reminds me of that one part in Mario Kart Double Dash in the Level "Dry Dry Desert" with the Quicksand and the monster that eats you if you sink in it.



mystery solved i guess, they know there's no harm



mystery solved i guess, they know there's no harm

A pigeon roller coaster.

Of death

So does Tony but he's lived this long
Red Spy, shut up. Still wondering why you aren't harvested.


Red Spy, shut up. Still wondering why you aren't harvested.

Shut up Chad you meanie
« Last Edit: October 15, 2016, 02:12:57 AM by Red Spy »




mystery solved i guess, they know there's no harm
that's what hillary WANTS you to believe

deep down inside she actually hates pigeons for being messengers back in the day. who knows what kind of state secrets they could be flying out of her offices or the white house through usb drives attached to pigeon feet???

Red Spy, shut up. Still wondering why you aren't harvested.

People still care about the harvest enough to bring it up outside of the thread?

Well, the video does have grains in it.


that's kind of impressive, to be honest
There's a video on Youtube of a rat fighting and incapacitating a pidgeon before dragging it off into some bushes.

Pidgeons and doves have lived so long because they breed like mad and almost all their needs are provided on a massive scale by humans.
Litter in streets brings them an unending bounty of food. Our tall buildings are also artificial cliffs for them to nest in, and built up cities bring the advantage of minimal green space reducing shelter for their avian predators.

Plus, we actively breed and domesticate them too.

It really doesn't matter if a few hundred get crushed by grain, or several thousand are squished by busses.

idunno either. My city bought hawks to kill them.

that's kind of impressive, to be honest
Rats in american cities are loving HUGE. We have small mice about the size of a pet mouse not hugeass rats.